Dynamics and Chemistry of Marine Stratocumulus (DYCOMS) Experiment

D. H. Lenschow
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I. R. Paluch
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A. R. Bandy
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R. Pearson Jr.
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S. R. Kawa
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C. J. Weaver
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B. J. Huebert
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J. G. Kay
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D. C. Thornton
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A. R. Driedger III
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A combined atmospheric chemistry-meteorology experiment, the Dynamics and Chemistry of the Marine Stratocumulus (DYCOMS), was carried out during the summer of 1985 over the eastern Pacific Ocean using the NCAR Electra aircraft. The objectives were to 1) study the budgets of several trace reactive species in a relatively pristine, steady-state, horizontally homogeneous, well-mixed boundary layer capped by a strong inversion and 2) study the formation, maintenance and dissipation of marine stratocumulus that persists off the California coast (as well as similar regions elsewhere) in summer. We obtained both mean and turbulence measurements of meteorological variables within and above the cloud-capped boundary layer that is typical of this region. Ozone was used successfully as a tracer for estimating entrainment rate. We found, however, that horizontal variability was large enough for ozone that a correction needs to be included in the ozone budget for the horizontal displacement due to turns even though the airplane was allowed to drift with the wind. The time rate-of-change term was significant in both the ozone and radon budgets; as a result, a considerably longer time interval than the two hours used between sets of flight legs would be desirable to improve the measurement accuracy of this term.

1 National Center for Atmospheric Research, (sponsored by the National Science Foundation) Boulder, Colorado.

2 Drexel University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

3 Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado.

4 The University of Rhode Island, Narragansett, Rhode Island.

5 Drexel University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

A combined atmospheric chemistry-meteorology experiment, the Dynamics and Chemistry of the Marine Stratocumulus (DYCOMS), was carried out during the summer of 1985 over the eastern Pacific Ocean using the NCAR Electra aircraft. The objectives were to 1) study the budgets of several trace reactive species in a relatively pristine, steady-state, horizontally homogeneous, well-mixed boundary layer capped by a strong inversion and 2) study the formation, maintenance and dissipation of marine stratocumulus that persists off the California coast (as well as similar regions elsewhere) in summer. We obtained both mean and turbulence measurements of meteorological variables within and above the cloud-capped boundary layer that is typical of this region. Ozone was used successfully as a tracer for estimating entrainment rate. We found, however, that horizontal variability was large enough for ozone that a correction needs to be included in the ozone budget for the horizontal displacement due to turns even though the airplane was allowed to drift with the wind. The time rate-of-change term was significant in both the ozone and radon budgets; as a result, a considerably longer time interval than the two hours used between sets of flight legs would be desirable to improve the measurement accuracy of this term.

1 National Center for Atmospheric Research, (sponsored by the National Science Foundation) Boulder, Colorado.

2 Drexel University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

3 Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado.

4 The University of Rhode Island, Narragansett, Rhode Island.

5 Drexel University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

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